Syrian caretaker government
Syrian caretaker government | |
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Cabinet of the Syrian Arab Republic | |
| 2024–2025 | |
| Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa (left) and former Prime Minister Mohammed al-Bashir (right) | |
| Date formed | 8 December 2024 |
| Date dissolved | 29 March 2025 |
| People and organisations | |
| President | Ahmed al-Sharaa |
| Prime Minister | |
| No. of ministers | 23 (excluding the prime minister) |
| Member parties | Hay'at Tahrir al-Sham (until 29 January 2025) |
| Status in legislature | Transitional Caretaker government |
| History | |
| Predecessor | |
| Successor | Syrian transitional government |
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Member State of the Arab League |
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Personal
Political offices
President of Syria Incumbent
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| Part of a series on the Syrian civil war |
| Syrian peace process |
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The Syrian caretaker government (Arabic: حكومة تصريف الأعمال السورية, romanized: Ḥukūmat Taṣrīf al-Aʿmāl as-Sūriyyah) was the provisional government of Syria. It was established in December 2024 by the Syrian opposition after the Syrian General Command appointed Mohammed al-Bashir as prime minister, replacing Mohammad Ghazi al-Jalali on 10 December. This came after the fall of the Assad regime and the exile of former Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. On 8 December 2024, hours after the fall of Damascus, Mohammad Ghazi al-Jalali, the outgoing prime minister and last head of government of the Ba'athist regime, agreed to lead the transitional government in a caretaking capacity. He then transferred power to Mohammed al-Bashir, prime minister of the Syrian Salvation Government (SSG), two days later.
On 29 January 2025, Ahmed al-Sharaa was appointed President of Syria by the Syrian General Command for the transitional period during the Syrian Revolution Victory Conference in Damascus, after serving as the de facto leader following the fall of the Assad regime. As president, al-Sharaa announced plans to issue a "constitutional declaration" as a legal reference following the repeal of the 2012 constitution of Ba'athist Syria.
On 13 March, he signed an interim constitution for a transitional period of five years, enshrining Islamic law as a main derivation of jurisprudence and promising to protect the rights of all Syria's ethnic and religious groups. On 29 March, the government was succeeded by the Syrian transitional government.